July 2008
One
Saturday night in the autumn of 1957 the 45’ of Buddy Holly’s “That’ll
Be The Day” (his second recording of the song, the one on the Brunswick
label), was being played over and over again at a church hall that I
sometimes went to in Swindon. We used to call these evenings ‘a
social’.
After several plays, the record would be turned over
and we jigged and jerked around to “I’m Looking For Someone to Love”
(such a simple and true sentiment for all 50’s teenagers). By the end
of the evening I had committed every detail of both songs to memory,
and on the bus home, and as I walked to our house from the bus stop, I
knew, in a mood of glorious euphoria, that my whole life was going to
be different.
From that day onwards, and for the next few
years, my musical and emotional life revolved around Buddy Holly. He
taught many of us how to play guitar properly too. Before Buddy we were
stuck on a boring old open G skiffle riff.
I met Maria Elena in
the seventies; she came to a few of our gigs and I was always thrilled
to be in her company. She told me that when you watched him the most
striking thing about his guitar-playing was the way he played the down
strokes with his right hand - the sheer speed of his rhythm. You can
see it on the few precious bits of film. His guitar always carried the
groove and ‘feel’ of the songs, and it was through him that I came to
realise what makes music truly swing.
Norman Petty’s
contribution to the ‘sound’ was just right, but even 10 year olds like
me sensed that Buddy would very quickly outgrow the influence and
contribution of the people around him. I remember having an earnest
conversation during a chemistry lesson about whether Petty deserved a
writing credit when everybody knew it was ‘all Buddy really’. As it
turned out the instincts of my classmates and myself were right. Would
Buddy have been doing that fatal tour if other people weren’t arguing
about their share of a part of him? I don’t think so.
In the
fifties the BBC rarely played ‘pop’ music, records were the only way to
hear it, -- if you could find someone with a record player!
Most
of us carried our 45’s and 78’s around to parties looking for a
Dansette (or a ‘Radiogram’, as the posh ones were called), because we
all had records, but few families could afford a player. Our records were our whole lives then, and Buddy’s are still my favourites.
At
the time of course, Elvis was ‘the King’, but Buddy was the one who
really did play the guitar on the records, who wrote his own brilliant
songs and sang within a great group. He didn’t pose ‘out the front’
(something we mere mortals could never aspire to), he didn’t have to!
For
me he was the true Number 1. He showed us all the way, and when he was
taken so early there was a chill emptiness in our lives that was only
warmed eventually by the arrival of the Beatles. He made the world a
better place.
Justin Hayward
|
|